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Tuesday, February 2, 2016

NYSUT: Elia’s presence at charter rally ‘sends the wrong message’ - Capitol Confidential

NYSUT: Elia’s presence at charter rally ‘sends the wrong message’ - Capitol Confidential:

NYSUT: Elia’s presence at charter rally ‘sends the wrong message’


New York State United Teachers thinks state Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia’s appearance at Tuesday’s Charter Advocacy Day “sends the wrong message at a time when she should be fully focused on working with the Board of Regents to immediately fix the state’s broken testing system and urging legislators to approve a significant state aid increase,” the union said in a very long sentence.
Elia spoke very briefly roughly a half-hour before reporters where told she would appear — two things that will tend to reduce coverage of her appearance.
Nevertheless, NYSUT was less than pleased:
Meeting with parents to gather input is one thing, but “The commissioner’s appearance today at a political rally sends the wrong message entirely,” said NYSUT President Karen E. Magee. “The commissioner is creating a distraction and sending the wrong message to the Legislature. The Common Core Task Force issued 21 recommendations that, as a whole, would put New York on a path toward ending the era of test-and-punish. Some 96 percent of students in public education attend traditional public schools. Parents and teachers are running out of patience with the pace of change. They expect the recommendations to be adopted by the Regents with fidelity — immediately. That should be the commissioner’s focus.”
Magee added, “Traditional public schools that serve the state’s neediest students have been devastated by budget cuts. The state still has not fully funded the Campaign for Fiscal Equity settlement. The commissioner should be rallying instead for the billions in state aid that our schools are owed.”
On the contrary, Magee noted, charter schools are flush with cash and do not need additional funding increases. A March 2015 NYSUT report found that the state’s charter schools held $282.2 million in cash and $392.1 million in unrestricted net assets. The 200 charters studied held an average of 25.3 percent of their annual budgets in cash reserves.
NYSUT’s statement comes in the wake of a strongly worded letter to Elia condemning her refusal to lessen testing 
NYSUT: Elia’s presence at charter rally ‘sends the wrong message’ - Capitol Confidential: